NSBA Legal Clips
Archived entries for restraint and seclusion

Federal appellate court rules parents not required to exhaust physical abuse and timeout claims under IDEA, but they failed on the merits of those claims

The Tenth Circuit has ruled that the parents of a disabled student were not required under the IDEA to exhaust their administrative remedies before bringing suit claiming physical abuse by staff and staff use of unapproved timeouts with their child. However, the Court concluded that the parents had failed on the merits of their claims, styled as a § 1983 action based on violation of the student’s Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process right, because the instances of alleged physical abuse and use of timeouts were not constitutional torts since the defendants’ behavior did not “shock the conscience” of the court.

Continue reading...

OCR finds North Carolina district’s use of seclusion rooms does not violate state law

StarNewsonline.com reports that Rick Holliday, Assistant Superintendent for Support Services, has announced that New Hanover County Schools’ use of seclusion rooms to deal with students’ aggressive behavior does not violate North Carolina law.

Continue reading...

Federal appellate court rules that use of desk with a restraint did not violate disabled student’s Fourth or Fourteenth Amendment rights

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit has ruled that a Colorado teacher’s use of a desk with a restraint did not violate a disabled student’s rights against an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment, and her Fourteenth Amendment due process and equal protection rights.

Continue reading...

U.S. Senate Committee holds hearing on use of restraint and seclusion of students

The Associated Press reports in The Washington Post that the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions recently convened a hearing on the use of restraint and seclusion to raise awareness of how much physical force is used when disciplining students.

Continue reading...

Parents sue school district for putting child in dark seclusion room for punishment

The Associated Press reports in The Republic that parents of a kindergarten student in central Kentucky have filed a $5 million lawsuit for putting their daughter into a dark, padded room with one window and a chair for timeout as punishment.

Continue reading...

Mississippi district agrees to settle suit over handcuffing students

According an Associated Press report on CBS Atlanta, Jackson Public Schools will no longer handcuff students to poles or other objects and will train staff at its alternative school on better methods of discipline.

Continue reading...

Ohio district sued over its use of seclusion on disabled students

Ohio Legal Rights Service (OLRS), which is an independent state agency that advocates on behalf of the disabled, has filed suit against the Columbus school system, reports StateImpact Ohio, over the use of “seclusion rooms,” which are secured rooms often used to isolate special needs students. In its suit, OLRS says it has initiated a “district-wide investigation of abuse, neglect and/or significant rights violation” in Columbus, Ohio’s largest school district.

Continue reading...

Parents of disabled student file suit against Georgia district claiming abuse by special education teachers caused son’s death

According to Courthouse News Service, Ronald and Arthalia Hatcher claim their son died from abuse suffered at the hands of two special education teachers. They have filed suit in Fulton County State Court against the Fulton County School District, the Fulton County School Board, the district’s superintendent, two special education teachers, and 15 other Fulton County public school employees.

Continue reading...

U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear special education case on exhaustion of administrative remedies

Mark Walsh reports in Education Week’s School Law Blog that the U.S. Supreme Court has denied review to a petition for certiorari in Payne v. Peninsula School District, Docket No. 11-539, a case implicating the exhaustion of administrative remedies requirement under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Peninsula School District (PSD) was seeking review of a federal appeals court decision ruling that because the mother’s suit raised constitutional claims in addition to claims under the federal special education law, the suit did not have to exhaust administrative remedies under the IDEA.

Continue reading...

Kentucky DOE drafting regulations to limit use of restraint and seclusion

According to a report from Associated Press (AP) in the Bowling Green Daily News, Kentucky education officials are acting to limit the use of restraint and seclusion on public school students after citing two schools for violating the rights of three disabled students who were subjected to the practices.

Continue reading...

Page 1 of 212

 



NSBA

Copyright © National School Boards Association. All rights reserved.
1680 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: (703) 838-6722 Fax: (703) 683-7590 E-mail: info@nsba.org

RSS Feed.